7 Key Financial Metrics to Scale Stroke Rehabilitation

Stroke Rehabilitation Center Kpi Metrics
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Description

KPI Metrics for Stroke Rehabilitation

Scaling a Stroke Rehabilitation practice requires tight control over capacity utilization and cost structure Your Gross Margin starts strong at 955% in 2026, but high fixed costs ($18,300 monthly) and specialized labor drive the break-even point to 14 months (February 2027) You must track therapist productivity, aiming for 80% capacity utilization by Year 3 Variable costs, including medical billing (60%) and marketing (50%), total 110% of revenue initially Focus on increasing average treatment price (ATP) and minimizing the time-to-discharge (TTD) to maximize long-term profitability This guide outlines the 7 core KPIs, their formulas, and required tracking cadence for the 2026 startup phase


7 KPIs to Track for Stroke Rehabilitation


# KPI Name Metric Type Target / Benchmark Review Frequency
1 Revenue Per Therapist (RPT) Productivity Measures therapist productivity; calculated as Total Monthly Revenue divided by Total FTE Therapists; target RPT must cover salary plus fixed overhead allocation Monthly
2 Capacity Utilization Rate Efficiency Measures the percentage of billable hours scheduled versus total available hours; calculated as Billable Hours / Total Available Hours; aim for 65–75% initially, growing toward 80% by Year 3 (2028) Weekly
3 Gross Margin Percentage (GM%) Profitability Measures profitability after direct costs (Clinical Supplies 30%, Therapy Materials 15%); calculated as (Revenue - COGS) / Revenue; target GM% should remain high, near 955% in 2026 Monthly
4 Labor Cost Percentage Operational Cost Measures total wages against revenue; calculated as Total Monthly Wages ($71,083 in 2026) / Total Monthly Revenue ($140,700 in 2026); must drop over time as utilization improves Monthly
5 Average Treatment Price (ATP) Pricing/Yield Measures the average reimbursement received per session across all modalities; calculated as Total Revenue / Total Treatments Delivered; track monthly to ensure pricing keeps pace with inflation (eg, PT price increases from $220 to $225 in 2027) Monthly
6 Time-to-Discharge (TTD) Clinical Flow Measures the average duration of a patient's treatment plan from intake to successful discharge; shorter TTD indicates clinical efficiency and faster patient throughput Monthly
7 Months to Breakeven Financial Health Measures the time required to cover cumulative startup costs and reach sustained profitability; the target is 14 months, reaching break-even in February 2027 based on current projections Quarterly



How do we ensure profitability given high fixed costs and specialized labor wages?

Profitability hinges on driving utilization high enough so that the contribution margin from therapists covers the $18,300 in fixed overhead quickly; understanding the initial capital needed helps frame this urgency, so review What Is The Estimated Cost To Open Your Stroke Rehabilitation Business? You need to define the minimum billable hours per therapist to ensure the business covers its base costs before hitting that $227k cash reserve target by January 2027.

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Fixed Cost Coverage Math

  • Monthly fixed overhead is $18,300; this is your baseline cost floor.
  • Calculate the required Revenue Per Therapist (RPT) needed to cover their direct wages plus fixed overhead contribution.
  • If your average therapist contribution margin (revenue minus direct variable costs) is $8,000, you need about 2.3 therapists working near full capacity just to cover fixed costs.
  • Every session above this threshold builds positive cash flow, but utilization must be high from day one.
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Capacity Utilization Levers

  • Specialized labor wages mean your variable cost per hour is high; this shrinks your contribution margin.
  • If therapist utilization dips below 70%, you defintely start burning cash against that $18.3k overhead.
  • The key lever is maximizing billable treatments per therapist per month, not just patient volume.
  • Hitting the $227,000 minimum cash requirement by Jan-27 means you cannot afford a slow ramp-up period.

Are we maximizing the billable capacity of our specialized therapists?

You are only maximizing billable capacity when Physical Therapists hit 650% utilization and Neuropsychologists reach 550% by 2026. If you're below these targets, you're defintely leaving money on the table due to scheduling gaps or slow referrals.

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Monitor Utilization Benchmarks

  • Capacity means tracking billable hours against available FTE hours for each specialist.
  • For 2026 projections, aim for 650% utilization for PTs and 550% for Neuropsychologists.
  • If onboarding takes 14+ days, churn risk rises, impacting your ability to fill these slots.
  • Understand the true operational cost before scaling; check What Is The Estimated Cost To Open Your Stroke Rehabilitation Business?
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Quantify Underutilized FTEs

  • Underutilization is the direct cost of idle, paid staff time waiting for clients.
  • If a PT costs $100k annually (salary plus overhead), 10% idle time is $10k lost per year per therapist.
  • Bottlenecks often hide in scheduling handoffs or slow referral pipelines from hospitals.
  • Your action is mapping the time between referral receipt and first billable session.

Which service line offers the highest revenue potential and needs focused marketing?

The Neuropsychologist service line offers the highest revenue potential per session at $350 Average Treatment Price (ATP) compared to $220 for Physical Therapy (PT), meaning marketing focus should prioritize filling those higher-value slots first, which is critical when mapping out your initial operational plan; for a deeper dive into structuring these initial financial assumptions, review What Are The Key Components To Include In Your Business Plan For Stroke Rehabilitation To Ensure A Successful Launch?

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Highest Value Service Line

  • Neuropsychology ATP is $350; PT ATP is $220.
  • This 59% ATP premium means Neuropsychology drives better gross margin per hour, defintely.
  • Marketing spend must target sources delivering Neuropsychology referrals first.
  • Plan capacity based on maximizing utilization of the higher-priced service.
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Cost Impact and Capacity Planning

  • Referral Incentives and Marketing costs start at 50% of revenue.
  • This high acquisition cost immediately pressures your contribution margin.
  • If PTs grow from 2 to 3 in 2027, capacity scales linearly, assuming utilization holds.
  • You need a clear path to reduce that 50% acquisition cost structure fast.

How do we measure patient recovery success and link it back to long-term value?

Measuring success for Stroke Rehabilitation means linking clinical improvements, like Functional Independence Measure (FIM) scores, directly to operational efficiency like time-to-discharge (TTD) and patient advocacy measured by Net Promoter Score (NPS). This data proves the value of your integrated care model to payers and referring physicians; Have You Considered How To Effectively Launch Stroke Rehabilitation Therapy Services?

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Clinical Efficacy and Throughput

  • Track the Functional Independence Measure (FIM) score change per client over their treatment duration.
  • Measure Time-to-Discharge (TTD) against benchmarks to optimize practitioner utilization rates.
  • Monitor readmission rates within 90 days; high rates signal incomplete recovery or poor discharge planning.
  • If TTD shortens by 5 days due to integrated therapy, you free up capacity for 2 additional clients monthly per therapist.
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Linking Outcomes to Long-Term Value

  • Establish a Net Promoter Score (NPS) survey post-discharge to gauge satisfaction.
  • A high NPS, say above 50, directly correlates with strong referral quality from hospitals.
  • Poor outcomes increase your cost of service delivery because clients require more sessions to hit milestones.
  • Focus on achieving 85% of clients reporting 'highly likely' to recommend your specialized center.


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Key Takeaways

  • Achieving the critical 14-month break-even target hinges entirely on rapidly increasing therapist capacity utilization rates toward the 80% goal.
  • Despite a strong 95.5% initial Gross Margin, high fixed costs and significant labor expenses necessitate aggressive management of the Labor Cost Percentage KPI.
  • To maximize profitability, the practice must actively monitor Revenue Per Therapist (RPT) to ensure productivity covers the high monthly wage expense of $71,083.
  • Long-term value and throughput are directly linked to clinical efficiency metrics, specifically minimizing Time-to-Discharge (TTD) and optimizing Average Treatment Price (ATP).


KPI 1 : Revenue Per Therapist (RPT)


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Definition

Revenue Per Therapist (RPT) shows how much money each full-time equivalent (FTE) therapist brings in monthly. This metric is your core measure of clinical productivity. You must ensure the RPT generated by each therapist covers their total loaded cost plus their allocated share of the center's fixed overhead.


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Advantages

  • Directly links therapist output to fixed cost coverage.
  • Helps forecast staffing needs based on revenue targets.
  • Identifies high-performing therapists needing support or replication.
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Disadvantages

  • Ignores the complexity of the service mix delivered.
  • Can penalize therapists focusing on complex, longer cases.
  • Doesn't measure quality, only top-line revenue generation.

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Industry Benchmarks

For specialized outpatient therapy centers, RPT needs to significantly outpace the fully loaded cost of the therapist (salary, benefits, training). A healthy target RPT is usually 2.5 to 3 times the therapist's monthly salary. If your Average Treatment Price (ATP) is low, your required RPT drives utilization higher.

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How To Improve

  • Drive Capacity Utilization Rate toward the 80% goal.
  • Increase the Average Treatment Price (ATP) through better payer contracts.
  • Reduce non-billable administrative time for clinical staff.

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How To Calculate

You calculate RPT by taking all the money earned in a month and dividing it evenly across the number of full-time therapists you employed that month. This is a simple division, but the inputs need to be clean.

RPT = Total Monthly Revenue / Total FTE Therapists


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Example of Calculation

Using your 2026 projections, total monthly revenue is set at $140,700. If you project having 8 FTE Therapists on staff that year, you can calculate the expected RPT. This figure must then be checked against the required coverage for the $71,083 in total monthly wages.

RPT = $140,700 / 8 FTE Therapists = $17,587.50 per FTE Therapist

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Tips and Trics

  • Segment RPT by therapist specialty to spot pricing issues.
  • Track RPT weekly to catch utilization dips before they become monthly problems.
  • Ensure RPT calculation excludes non-recurring revenue items like grants.
  • If RPT lags, review Time-to-Discharge (TTD) to see if patients are staying too long.

KPI 2 : Capacity Utilization Rate


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Definition

Capacity Utilization Rate measures how much of your licensed practitioners' available time is actually spent on billable therapy sessions. This metric is crucial because your fixed costs, like therapist salaries, don't change if utilization is low. It tells you if you're maximizing the capacity you built the center around.


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Advantages

  • Links staffing costs directly to revenue potential.
  • Shows operational efficiency gaps in scheduling.
  • Helps forecast accurate Revenue Per Therapist (RPT).
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Disadvantages

  • Can push staff toward burnout if targets are too high.
  • Doesn't measure the quality of the therapy delivered.
  • Extremely high rates might hide slow patient throughput.

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Industry Benchmarks

For specialized outpatient rehabilitation centers like yours, initial targets should sit between 65% and 75% utilization. Hitting 80% utilization by 2028 is the goal for mature operations. Falling consistently below 60% means your fixed labor costs are too high relative to patient volume, making it hard to cover that $71,083 monthly wage bill.

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How To Improve

  • Streamline intake and paperwork to reduce non-billable admin time.
  • Aggressively pursue referrals from partner hospitals to fill open slots.
  • Use predictive scheduling models to smooth out daily patient flow.

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How To Calculate

You calculate this by dividing the total hours you actually billed to patients by the total hours your therapists were scheduled to be available to work. This is your core measure of service delivery efficiency.

Capacity Utilization Rate = Billable Hours / Total Available Hours


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Example of Calculation

Say you have one full-time equivalent (FTE) therapist working 160 standard hours in a month. If 112 of those hours were spent delivering direct, billable therapy sessions, your utilization is 70%. This 70% hits your initial target range.

Capacity Utilization Rate = 112 Billable Hours / 160 Total Available Hours = 0.70 or 70%

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Tips and Trics

  • Track utilization weekly, not just monthly, to catch scheduling dips fast.
  • Ensure utilization targets align with your Revenue Per Therapist (RPT) goals.
  • If utilization rises, watch the Labor Cost Percentage drop as expected.
  • If patient onboarding takes 14+ days, churn risk is defintely higher.

KPI 3 : Gross Margin Percentage (GM%)


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Definition

Gross Margin Percentage (GM%) shows how much revenue remains after paying for the direct costs of delivering your rehabilitation service. These direct costs, or Cost of Goods Sold (COGS), include items like Clinical Supplies and Therapy Materials. This metric tells you the core profitability of every billable treatment before you account for fixed overhead like rent or administrative salaries.


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Advantages

  • Quickly assesses variable cost control efficiency.
  • Informs pricing decisions for the Average Treatment Price (ATP).
  • Helps forecast profitability based on utilization changes.
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Disadvantages

  • Ignores critical fixed costs like therapist salaries.
  • Can mask inefficiencies in patient scheduling.
  • Doesn't reflect revenue quality (e.g., slow payer collections).

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Industry Benchmarks

For specialized outpatient therapy centers, a healthy GM% is usually above 50%, depending heavily on payer mix. If your direct costs are too high, you defintely won't cover the high labor costs inherent in one-on-one care. Benchmarks help you know if your supply chain management is competitive.

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How To Improve

  • Aggressively manage Clinical Supplies spend down from 30%.
  • Source Therapy Materials through longer-term vendor contracts.
  • Increase utilization to spread fixed supply purchasing costs.

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How To Calculate

You calculate Gross Margin Percentage by taking total revenue, subtracting the direct costs associated with delivering that revenue, and dividing the result by total revenue. Direct costs here are 30% for Clinical Supplies and 15% for Therapy Materials, totaling 45% of revenue.

GM% = (Revenue - (Clinical Supplies % + Therapy Materials %)) / Revenue

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Example of Calculation

If revenue per month is $100,000, your direct costs are $45,000 ($30,000 in supplies plus $15,000 in materials), leaving $55,000 in gross profit. This results in a 55% margin based on your cost structure. The target GM% for 2026 is stated near 955%, which suggests a focus on extreme cost control or perhaps a different calculation basis is intended for that future target.

GM% = ($100,000 - ($30,000 + $15,000)) / $100,000 = 55%

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Tips and Trics

  • Track supply costs per treatment, not just as a percentage.
  • Ensure materials used align directly with billable therapy time.
  • Review the 30% Clinical Supplies cost against competitor contracts.
  • If utilization hits 80%, margin improvement must come from cost reduction.

KPI 4 : Labor Cost Percentage


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Definition

Labor Cost Percentage measures how much of your total revenue you spend on wages. This is critical because, in specialized therapy centers, labor is your main cost driver. If this number stays high, profitability suffers, even if revenue grows.


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Advantages

  • Shows direct operational efficiency tied to staffing levels.
  • Highlights pricing pressure if wages rise faster than reimbursement.
  • Guides hiring decisions based on current utilization targets.
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Disadvantages

  • Cutting staff too aggressively harms patient care quality.
  • It ignores the impact of non-wage labor costs like benefits.
  • It can mask inefficiency if high utilization relies on overtime.

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Industry Benchmarks

For specialized outpatient services, labor costs often run between 40% and 60% of revenue. If your LCP is consistently above 55%, you're likely underpricing services or overstaffing relative to patient volume. Keeping it low is essential for scaling.

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How To Improve

  • Increase the Capacity Utilization Rate toward the 80% goal.
  • Negotiate better reimbursement rates (Average Treatment Price).
  • Optimize scheduling to reduce therapist downtime between appointments.

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How To Calculate

You calculate this by dividing your total monthly payroll expenses by the total revenue generated that same month. This ratio must drop as you get better at filling your therapists' schedules.

Labor Cost Percentage = Total Monthly Wages / Total Monthly Revenue


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Example of Calculation

Using the 2026 projections, we see total monthly wages are $71,083 against revenue of $140,700. This means your initial labor cost percentage is about 50.5%.

$71,083 / $140,700 = 0.5052 or 50.52%

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Tips and Trics

  • Track wages against billable hours, not just total revenue.
  • Ensure new hires are only onboarded when utilization hits a defined threshold.
  • Review the LCP monthly; a spike signals scheduling problems or unexpected attrition.
  • Factor in the cost of non-billable administrative time for therapists; defintely track this separately.

KPI 5 : Average Treatment Price (ATP)


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Definition

Average Treatment Price (ATP) tells you the actual dollar amount you receive for every therapy session delivered, regardless of the specific service mix. Tracking this monthly ensures your pricing strategy successfully captures revenue growth and offsets rising operational costs. It's the true measure of your service's realized value.


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Advantages

  • Shows true pricing power across all service types.
  • Helps confirm if negotiated rates are holding up post-contract.
  • Directly flags if revenue lags behind cost inflation trends.
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Disadvantages

  • Hides poor performance in high-value treatment modalities.
  • Can mask declining patient volume if prices rise slightly.
  • Ignores the underlying cost difference between PT and SLP sessions.

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Industry Benchmarks

For specialized outpatient physical therapy (PT) in the US, ATP often falls between $180 and $250, depending heavily on payer mix and geographic location. Tracking ATP against expected reimbursement schedules is crucial because insurance contracts often dictate annual fee schedules. If your ATP falls below the expected rate for your service mix, you're losing realized revenue.

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How To Improve

  • Systematically review and adjust rates annually for inflation.
  • Negotiate better contracts with major commercial payers yearly.
  • Prioritize scheduling high-reimbursement modalities when capacity allows.

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How To Calculate

You calculate ATP by dividing your total collected reve nue by the total number of therapy sessions you completed in that period. This gives you a single, blended reimbursement rate across all services offered. This metric is key for forecasting revenue stability.

ATP = Total Revenue / Total Treatments Delivered


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Example of Calculation

If RePath Recovery hits its 2026 monthly revenue target of $140,700, and during that month, the team delivered exactly 639 billable treatments across all modalities, the ATP is calculated as follows.

ATP = $140,700 / 639 Treatments = $220.19 per Treatment

This $220.19 ATP aligns closely with the expected baseline pricing environment before planned 2027 increases.


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Tips and Trics

  • Segment ATP by modality (PT, OT, SLP) immediately for granular insight.
  • Compare current ATP against the prior month's budgeted rate.
  • Flag any month where ATP drops more than 0.5% sequentially.
  • Ensure billing software accurately reflects contracted rates, defintely not just billed amounts.

KPI 6 : Time-to-Discharge (TTD)


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Definition

Time-to-Discharge (TTD) is how long a patient stays in your specialized outpatient program, measured from when they start therapy until they successfully complete treatment. For a stroke recovery center, a shorter TTD means your integrated therapy model is working well, leading to faster patient throughput and freeing up capacity for the next client. It’s a defintely direct measure of clinical effectiveness.


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Advantages

  • Faster patient throughput means you can serve more clients annually with the same therapist hours.
  • It validates the integrated care model, showing personalized plans deliver quicker results.
  • Higher throughput directly supports revenue goals, especially when tied to the Average Treatment Price (ATP).
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Disadvantages

  • Over-focusing on speed can lead to premature discharge, increasing relapse risk.
  • It might mask underlying issues if complex cases are rushed through the system.
  • It doesn't account for the quality of recovery, only the duration of service delivery.

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Industry Benchmarks

Benchmarks for TTD vary widely based on stroke severity and the intensity of the outpatient program offered. Generally, shorter durations are sought after, but you must compare your TTD against local hospital discharge standards for similar acuity levels. A good internal benchmark is tracking the TTD trend month-over-month to ensure consistency in your service delivery timeline.

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How To Improve

  • Standardize intake assessments to set realistic, aggressive discharge targets immediately.
  • Increase therapist coordination across Physical, Occupational, and Speech Therapy disciplines daily.
  • Integrate advanced rehabilitation technology to accelerate skill acquisition during sessions.

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How To Calculate

To find the average duration, you sum up the total time spent by all patients who completed treatment in a period and divide that by the number of those patients. This gives you the average length of stay required for successful recovery in your facility.

TTD = Total Days in Treatment / Total Patients Discharged


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Example of Calculation

Say your center treated 15 stroke survivors who finished their plans last quarter. If the combined total of their treatment days was 525 days, you calculate the TTD by dividing the total days by the number of discharges. This metric tells you exactly how long, on average, capital is tied up in a single patient episode.

TTD = 525 Total Days / 15 Discharged Patients = 35 Days

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Tips and Trics

  • Segment TTD by stroke type (e.g., ischemic versus hemorrhagic).
  • Tie TTD reduction goals directly to therapist performance reviews.
  • Monitor TTD alongside the Capacity Utilization Rate; shorter stays shouldn't mean lower utilization.
  • Ensure discharge criteria are objective, focusing on measurable milestones, not just patient preference.

KPI 7 : Months to Breakeven


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Definition

Months to Breakeven shows how long it takes for your cumulative profit to erase all the money you spent setting up the business. It’s the critical measure of capital efficiency for any startup. For this specialized rehabilitation center, the target is hitting this point in 14 months, projecting sustained profitability by February 2027 based on current operational plans.


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Advantages

  • Sets a hard deadline for achieving operational scale and cash flow neutrality.
  • Helps founders accurately plan the required investment runway before needing new capital.
  • Forces immediate focus on maximizing contribution margin per patient visit.
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Disadvantages

  • It relies heavily on initial startup cost estimates, which often increase during build-out.
  • It ignores the quality of profit post-breakeven; slow margin growth means risk remains.
  • If utilization lags the 65–75% initial goal, the date moves quickly.

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Industry Benchmarks

For specialized, high-fixed-cost service businesses like intensive outpatient therapy, the breakeven timeline is often longer than asset-light models. While some quick-scaling models aim for 12 months, centers requiring specialized equipment and licensed staff typically budget 18 to 24 months. Achieving 14 months suggests tight control over initial capital deployment.

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How To Improve

  • Drive Capacity Utilization Rate above 70% as fast as possible to increase billable hours.
  • Ensure Average Treatment Price (ATP) increases annually to offset rising costs.
  • Keep fixed overhead low until utilization covers the Labor Cost Percentage ($71,083 in 2026).

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How To Calculate

You divide the total amount of money spent getting the doors open by the average profit you make each month after opening. This calculation assumes you have already covered Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) and are looking at operating profit before interest and taxes.

Months to Breakeven = Cumulative Startup Costs / Average Monthly Net Operating Profit


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Example of Calculation

Suppose the initial investment for specialized equipment and leasehold improvements totaled $500,000. If, after covering direct clinical costs and achieving 65% utilization, the center generates an average monthly net operating profit of $35,700, the time to breakeven is calculated below. The timeline is defintely sensitive to that initial investment number.

$500,000 / $35,700 = 14.00 Months

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Tips and Trics

  • Model breakeven based on 90% of projected utilization for a conservative view.
  • Track Revenue Per Therapist (RPT) against the required threshold weekly.
  • Ensure all startup expenditures are correctly classified as capital expenditures.
  • If Time-to-Discharge (TTD) shortens, it accelerates breakeven by freeing capacity faster.


Frequently Asked Questions

Labor and facility costs dominate Total monthly fixed costs are $18,300, primarily the $12,000 Facility Lease Wages are also significant, starting at $71,083 monthly for the 2026 team, requiring high utilization to offset